“After a slow start, the Low Carbon Agriculture programme has gained traction and today lots of farmers are adopting measures to restore pastures in Brazil,” he says.
In addition to informing government policies, Dr De Oliveira Silva is working with the Brazilian company JBS, one of the largest meat processing companies in the world, to devise a greenhouse gas emissions reduction plan to achieve net-zero by 2040. “We are helping JBS to identify measures to not just reduce carbon dioxide, but methane emissions as well.”
On a 100-year timescale, methane’s global warming potential is more than 28 times that of carbon dioxide. In recognition of the need to take global action on methane, at COP26 in 2021, more than 100 countries (including Brazil) pledged to cut methane emissions by 30 per cent by 2030.
“Reducing methane emissions is more complicated than reducing carbon dioxide emissions, because it requires different, more expensive technologies,” explains Dr De Oliveira Silva.
Selective breeding, feed supplements and some promising additives can help cattle use feed more efficiently and reduce their methane production, but these approaches are yet to be widely adopted.
Meat demand
While most models for calculating the environmental impact of meat production provide a fixed number, the model developed by Dr De Oliveira Silva can capture the effects of changes in demand.
“Demand is the main driver of technology adoption,” Dr De Oliveira Silva says.
In Brazil, if the demand for beef increases, farmers have to intensify production in the context of deforestation-control policies, which stimulate the adoption of pasture restoration measures resulting in reduced greenhouse gas emissions. Conversely, and counter-intuitively, reduced demand for beef could lead to an increase in emissions due to reduced incentives to restore pastures.